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- Title
Imputing Missing Race/Ethnicity in Pediatric Electronic Health Records: Reducing Bias with Use of U.S. Census Location and Surname Data.
- Authors
Grundmeier, Robert W.; Song, Lihai; Ramos, Mark J.; Fiks, Alexander G.; Elliott, Marc N.; Fremont, Allen; Pace, Wilson; Wasserman, Richard C.; Localio, Russell
- Abstract
Objective To assess the utility of imputing race/ethnicity using U.S. Census race/ethnicity, residential address, and surname information compared to standard missing data methods in a pediatric cohort. Data Sources/Study Setting Electronic health record data from 30 pediatric practices with known race/ethnicity. Study Design In a simulation experiment, we constructed dichotomous and continuous outcomes with pre-specified associations with known race/ethnicity. Bias was introduced by nonrandomly setting race/ethnicity to missing. We compared typical methods for handling missing race/ethnicity (multiple imputation alone with clinical factors, complete case analysis, indicator variables) to multiple imputation incorporating surname and address information. Principal Findings Imputation using U.S. Census information reduced bias for both continuous and dichotomous outcomes. Conclusions The new method reduces bias when race/ethnicity is partially, nonrandomly missing.
- Subjects
UNITED States; ETHNICITY; PEDIATRICS; ELECTRONIC health records; CENSUS
- Publication
Health Services Research, 2015, Vol 50, Issue 4, p946
- ISSN
0017-9124
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/1475-6773.12295